Yellow Thingy
© Stranger Dimensions
On March 22 in Yongjin, Sichuan, China, Peng Xianyong witnessed a light in the sky. It brightened the landscape as it passed, red and green with a long, streaking tail.

That would have been strange enough, but the next morning, Xianyong discovered four yellow blobs in his front yard, arranged in something that looked like a Chinese character.

He approached one of the blobs and, well, he poked it with a stick. This revealed its peculiar insides, a bloody red and brown. Apparently, it smelled of "fresh plants" and was soft as eggs, but did not "spread" when broken.

It's probably a mold or fungus, but this isn't the first time a strange substance has popped up after a meteor sighting. After the Russian meteorite incident last month, "alien" slime was located at a Somerset nature reserve. And, you know, there's a long history of stuff called Star Jelly, mysterious goo said to arrive during meteor showers.

Source: WCC Daily (In Mandarin)